Concordia's Thursday Report Online  
    Volume 26, No. 3, October 11, 2001  
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Sabrina Stea
Bill Vorn
Gary Kynoch

Angry students at CSU assembly

Business, engineering students outvote CSU’s activist agenda. (Above, President Sabrina Stea)

 

Attacks an abrupt economic check

The attacks were a catalyst for economic slowdown, not a root cause, says Kryzanowski.

Pinning down the origins of petroleum

Yves Gélinas makes a breakthrough in marine organic chemistry.
 
     
      More articles: Regular Features
   
  Science complex will bring scientists together In Brief
      Names in the News
  Care of the environment overdue Letters
      Appointments
  Concordia libraries gain respite from the soaring cost of journals Of Note
      The Back Page
  Major donors take a wait-and-see attitude
       
  War hero’s legacy helps foreign students  
     
  Icelandic sagas presented to Concordia
     
  Good business has the human touch

 

     
  Charitable giving brings tremendous benefits to all
       
  A banner effort for peace and tolerance on campus
     
  Reparations for past slavery face legal and economic hurdles  
     
  Turmoil at Durban conference yielded some positive results  
       
  Falling into war is a danger for emerging democracies  
       
  Claudine Monteil et Simone de Beauvoir : féministes de la première heure  
       
  The School of Business launches certificate program in e-business  
       
  China struggling with capitalism  
       
  Journalists grapple with post-traumatic stress  
         
    Toastmasters takes the horror out of public speaking  
         
    Butt out with help from friends at work  
         
    Suicide alluring to the depressed: psychologist  
         
    Fraternities gentler, but not pushovers  
         
    Tomorrow’s School Today project is expanding